Van Gogh painted this view of a cypress and sky in 1890. The original hangs in Holland at the Kroller-Muller Museum in Otterlo. The entire design is embroidered using one stitch type only, a satin. This piece was used to train over a hundred designers in this technique. This embroidered version is one of a limited edition of 100 pieces.

The detail in this piece and the use of metallic threads express a maturity in design and ability in this digital embroidered art medium. As there are no schools to learn this craft it literally can take years of trial and error before a designer can accomplish pieces such as this.

Van Gogh painted this sunset using oil on cardboard in October 1888. The original hangs in Holland at the Kroller-Muller Museum in Otterlo. 372,000 stitches to create one of these embroideries uses 17 hours of machine time. The first embroidered one took 53 hours of digitizing to create the master file.

This and City Chaos were done as a set, digitized one stitch at a time, taking weeks to complete the original file. They are being offered as a limited edition of 150 per image, signed and numbered by the artist on the reverse.

This and Country Serenity were done as a set, digitized one stitch at a time, taking weeks to complete the original file. They are being offered as a limited edition of 150 per image, signed and numbered by the artist on the reverse.

These images represent the same farm throughout the year. One embroidery for each season. The winter is dark and through the choice of colors appears cold and harsh. Spring is lighter with pastels. Summer is vivid and welcoming with its bright color palette. The final version, Autumn, uses golds and oranges to bring back memories of falls past. Each embroidery is sewn on white duponi silk and stretched on 6x6 canvases. This pricing is for the complete set, if you would prefer to order individual pieces they are $15 each, please call.

Here are the two blackwork Chinese inspired designs of Country Serenity and City Chaos framed together. Each stitch is digitized one at a time individually due to the style of this embroidery. This took a tremendous amount of time and editing to achieve detail without overly high densities.